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Sylvia Porter Quotes

American economist and journalist (d. 1991), Birth: 18-6-1913
1.
Invest in yourself, in your education. There's nothing better.
Sylvia Porter

2.
Beware of the danger signals that flag problems: silence, secretiveness, or sudden outburst.
Sylvia Porter

3.
One of the soundest rules to remember when making forecasts in the field of economics is that whatever is to happen is happening already.
Sylvia Porter

4.
I've learned ruthless concentration. I can write under any circumstances...street noises, loud talk, music, you name it.
Sylvia Porter

5.
Money never remains just coins and pieces of paper. Money can be translated into the beauty of living, a support in misfortune, an education, or future security.
Sylvia Porter

Similar Authors: Cassandra Clare Winston Churchill H. L. Mencken Dave Barry John Steinbeck Ludwig von Mises Jeanette Winterson Michael Jackson Benjamin Disraeli Hunter S. Thompson Frank Herbert John Kenneth Galbraith Milton Friedman David Hume John Stuart Mill
6.
The average family exists only on paper and its average budget is a fiction, invented by statisticians for the convenience of statisticians.
Sylvia Porter

7.
For millions, the retirement dream is in reality an economic nightmare. For millions, growing old today means growing poor, being sick, living in substandard housing, and having to scrimp merely to subsist.
Sylvia Porter

8.
Money can be translated into the beauty of living.
Sylvia Porter

Quote Topics by Sylvia Porter: Average Economic Injustice Family Injustice Motivation Fields Opposition Invest In Yourself Femininity Paper Conflict Assumption Silence Economist Retirement Noise Mean Writing Money Economic Coins Finance Support Remember Good Enough Education Independent Affair Flags People
9.
I've always been independent, and I don't see how it conflicts with femininity.
Sylvia Porter

10.
I worked up a daily fury about some economic injustice because there were so many of them.
Sylvia Porter

11.
I am not and should not be considered an economist.
Sylvia Porter

12.
I had always assumed that people were interested in economic affairs, just as I was. My assumption was justified. The times caught up with me. I was ready. I was there.
Sylvia Porter

13.
In those days [1935] I would read what the opposition papers got out, and I'd say to myself, 'What I'm doing just isn't good enough.'
Sylvia Porter